Empowered YOUth: A Father and Son's Journey to Conscious Livingby Michael Eisen and Jeffrey Eisen

Empowered YOUth is the heartfelt story of Michael and Jeffrey Eisen, who rose up from a tumultuous, emotional past to come together in a loving, respectful relationship as father and son, coach and student. Through this engaging narrative, they provide a refreshing perspective on how parents and kids can work together to empower one another by opening the channels of communication, dissolving fear, and surrendering the need for control.

With a perfect balance of moving stories, applied learning, and practical wisdom, Empowered YOUth offers guidance for parents, young people, educators, and anyone seeking a more empowered life. While adults will instantly relate to Jeffrey’s struggle to connect with his children, provide for his family, and listen to his own heart’s desire, young people will love Michael’s honest and emotional examination of an angst-filled childhood that was laden with stress, sadness, isolation, and self-inflicted pressure.

Through this story of a relationship that has been broken apart and put back together, Jeffrey and Michael provide inspiration for those looking to empower the next generation in a more loving, open, and intuitive way.

EXCERPT

Uncovering Your Authentic Self

Since each human being is unique, one person’s authentic self will always be different from another’s. It’s important to feel confident in your uniqueness. Unless you’re prepared to let go of the pressure to fit in, it will be hard to identify who you truly are. Begin by getting familiar with your characteristics. It’s critical, at this point, to drop all judgments. Things are no longer good or bad—they just are.

Most of us have been taught that our strengths are good and our weaknesses are bad. We’ve been taught that we should improve on our weaknesses or fix them. But what if those personality traits that others identify as problems actually feel okay to us? For example, being disorganized can also be seen as flexible and free. Being flaky or ditsy can also be seen as happy and giddy. Being rigid can also be seen as focused and driven. If we give up these attributes because others judge them as negative, does this not mean that we’re denying our true self? The things we feel comfortable with are what make up our authentic self, not the ones others tell us we should feel good about.

In order to find your authentic self, it’s important to better understand your own characteristics and behaviors. There is an ancient document of Hermetic teachings called The Kybalion, and one of the seven principles in this document is titled the Principle of Polarity. It embodies the idea that “everything is dual; everything has poles; everything has its pair of opposites.” When you look at two things that appear to be opposites, The Kybalion tells us that what you’re really seeing are two extremes of the same thing existing in a continuum. Take hot and cold—both are extreme forms of temperature with varying degrees in between (cool and warm, for example). Because there is no finite definition of hot or cold, it’s difficult for people to agree on what each should feel like. What each person experiences, then, is based on his or her perception.

This is the same for human character traits. Some have a greater tendency to be responsible, while others are more irresponsible. Once you’ve given up on judging either of these as good or bad, you can try to get a sense of where you fit on the continuum. If you tend to lean more toward irresponsibility, then ask yourself: How do I feel about this aspect of myself? If you’re comfortable with this quality, then it may very well be part of your authentic self. Keep in mind that all traits have positive and negative aspects. Being too responsible can have its drawbacks, just as being too irresponsible can. The object here is to become familiar with all of your characteristics and check in to determine how you feel about them.

On the other hand, there may be some traits you know that you possess but don’t feel good about. For example, you may find yourself embarrassed and self-conscious around others, as I did throughout high school. You’re likely unsure of where these apprehensions come from, but you know they don’t seem natural to you. When you’re in a place of embarrassment, you typically don’t feel good, which means that you are out of alignment with your true, genuine self. While you don’t need to be self-conscious when speaking up in a group, and there is no reason to feel embarrassed any time you’re singled out, your subconscious brings up this response automatically. Until you’re able to shift toward a place of self-love and confidence, you’ll continue to come off as an insecure and awkward person—even though that’s not who you truly are.

Once you’re able to identify these characteristics, you may choose to dig deeper and search for the underlying issue that has caused this part of you to become out of alignment. Maybe you were once singled out in a crowd and made to feel foolish and insignificant. Or perhaps once when you did take a chance and speak your mind, you were shut down and criticized. Until you can make peace with your past and forgive those who hurt you, you’ll continue to be haunted by these experiences and have trouble expressing yourself or taking a stand. But once you do the inner work to overcome whatever it was that brought about this inauthentic character trait, you’ll be free to live more authentically as the confident, free, and happy person you truly are.

This excerpt was taken from the book Empowered YOUth by Jeffrey and Michael Eisen. It is published by Hay House and is available at all bookstores or online at: www.hayhouse.com.